Schwarz was born in Hermsdorf, Silesia (now Sobieszów, Poland). In 1868 he married Marie Kummer,[1] who was the daughter to the mathematician Ernst Eduard Kummer[2] and Ottilie née Mendelssohn (a daughter of Nathan Mendelssohn's and granddaughter of Moses Mendelssohn). Schwarz and Kummer had six children, including his daughter Emily Schwarz.[2]
Schwarz's works include Bestimmung einer speziellen Minimalfläche, which was crowned by the Berlin Academy in 1867 and printed in 1871, and Gesammelte mathematische Abhandlungen (1890).
In 1892 he became a member of the BerlinAcademy of Science and a professor at the University of Berlin, where his students included Lipót Fejér, Paul Koebe and Ernst Zermelo. In total, he advised at least 22 Ph. D students.[4] In 1914 Schwarz's friends and former students published a volume with 34 articles in celebration of the 50th anniversary of his doctoral dissertation.[8]
His name is attached to many ideas in mathematics,[2] including the following:
^ abO'Connor, J. J.; Robertson, E. F. "Schwarz biography". www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk. The MacTutor History of Mathematics. Archived from the original on 5 June 2016. Retrieved 22 May 2016.
^Bottazzini, Umberto (30 April 2003). "Algebraic truths vs geometric fantasies: Weierstrass' Response to Riemann". arXiv:math/0305022.
^Schwarz, Hermann Amandus (1884). "Proof of the theorem that the ball has less surface area than any other body of the same volume". News of the Royal Society of Sciences and the Georg-August-Universität Göttingen. 1884: 1–13.